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FILM INTERNATIONAL
aka "FILMINT"
Bimonthly Magazine from Sweden
Ceased publication


- First issue: 2003
- FILMHAFTET was written in Swedish and English from 1973 to 2002.
- FILM INTERNATIONAL is the successor written only in English.
- "Published as a bi-monthly, full colour magazine, Film International covers all aspects of film culture in a visually dynamic way. This new breed of film publication brings together established film scholars with renowned journalists to provide an informed and animated commentary on the spectacle of world cinema."
- For previous issues see FILMHAFTET.
- Published by Intellect
- Website: www.filmint.nu

Last updated:
30 May 2023
(see recent updates)
Special thanks for this page goes to:
Garry Malvern
Scott Matheson

COVERS FOUND & MISSING
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CONTENTS: 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 All GALLERIES: 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 All

Issue 54
Vol 9 # 6
2011


Issue 53
Vol 9 # 5
2011


Issue 52
October/November/December 2011
Volume 9 Issue 4
Editorial: Larry Portis, 1943-2011 by Daniel Lindvall
'Based on the novel by Kurt Vonnegut' by Gary McMahon
The Barcelona School and the New Spanish Cinema by Christiane Passevant
Origins of the New Spanish Cinema: interview with Basilio Martin Patino presented by Christiane Passevant
The Recovered Memory of the Spanish Civil War and Revolution: an interview with Jaime Camino presented by Christiane Passevant
Beyond the Barcelona School: an interview with Vicente Aranda presented by Christiane Passevant
The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada and the Cognitive US-Mexico Border by Jaime Isbell (Winner of the 2010 Frank Capra Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Film Criticism)
Fourth Iris Prize Festival report and interview with Magnus Mork, director of Samaritan by Ryan Prout
Todd Verow and James Derek Dwyer interviewed by Gary M. Kramer
DVD Reviews: Now & Later, Make Way for Tomorrow
Book Reviews: Stanley Kubrick's Napoleon, Disability on Film
Film Reviews: Bi, Don't Be Afraid, Dogtooth, Elmina
Around the Circuit: Cannes 2011


Issue 51
July/August/September 2011
I'M AS MAD AS HELL, AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE THIS ANYMORE! Insane cinema

'Psychiatry quit defining madness after widespread experiments exposed shocking errors in diagnosis. Sanity is indexed to reality but reality is cultural and transient, of no fixed abode. 'Well adjusted' to what: 1930s Berlin or 1960s San Francisco? Elwood P. Dowd: "I wrestled with reality for 35 years, doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it."'

Gary McMahon on the history of 'madness', its uses and definitions, in Hollywood cinema and beyond.

Beware of the wolves! The Turkish versus the European reception of Valley of the Wolves: Iraq (2006)

'Serdar Akar's action film Kurtlar Vadisi: Irak/Valley of the Wolves: Iraq was released in Turkey in January 2006. Riding the waves of Turkish nationalism and capitalizing on widespread frustrations over Turkey's geopolitical situation, the film became one of the most-watched local films ever. Soon afterwards, the film was released in European theatres. Although targeted at viewers of Turkish origin, the film caught the attention of others too. This marked the beginning of a polemic reception and a wide public and political denouncement of the film's anti-American and anti-Semitic character.'

A reception study by Kevin Smets, Dilek Kaya Mutlu and Roel Vande Winkel.

'He loved what he did so much!' An Interview with Evans (Evans) Frankenheimer

'Arguably post-war Hollywood's most politically engaged and astute writer/director, John Frankenheimer (1930-2002) was also an incredible visual stylist, a man who learned the craft of image-making both from his early years as a photographer and from intense and demanding work he did in quality live TV drama during the 1950s, where he managed writing, rehearsals, storyboarding and - as the shows unfolded - the instant editing made possible by multiple camera set-ups. This was a period (like the celebrated years D.W. Griffith spent at Biograph) that provided Frankenheimer with the kind of concentrated hands-on training with the medium that few have been lucky enough to experience...'

Murray Pomerance interviews the director's widow, Evans Frankenheimer, about her husband's long career and his relationship to, among others, Bobby Kennedy, Frank Sinatra and Toshiro Mifune. With an introduction by R. Barton Palmer.

'The English master of movie melodrama': Hitchcock, horror and the woman's film

'As the following will therefore demonstrate, not only was Hitchcock identified as a horror director during the 1940s, but as the central horror director of the period. Furthermore, his films clearly demonstrated the connection between films that have since been presented as separate and distinct from one another through the use of generic terms that were invented in later periods: films identified as examples of film noir or the paranoid woman's film. As a result, while many of Hitchcock's films feature the persecuted male of many supposedly noir thrillers, and often operated as the template for such films, many of his films also featured the female investigator of the paranoid woman's film...'

Mark Jancovich takes issue with the opinion that Psycho was Hitch's first horror movie.



Issue 50
April/May/June 2011
Editorial: Hollywood and the Norden
by Tommy Gustafsson and Pietari Kaapa (Guest editors)

Adapting National Identity: Ethical Borders Made Suspect in the Hollywood Version of Susanne Bier's Brothers
by Meryl Shriver-Rice

After The Celebration: Thomas Vinterberg's It's All About Love
by Arne Lunde

Hunting High and Low: Notes on Nazi Zombies, Francophiles and National Cinema(s)
by Jo Sondre Moseng and Havard Andreas Vibeto

Hollywood Sin, Scandinavian Virtue: The 1967 Revolt of I Am Curious and The Graduate
by Sψren Birkvad

Born American? Renny Harlin and Global Hollywood
by Pietari Kaapa

DVD Reviews: Dillinger is Dead, Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, Mala Noche, The Life of Jesus

Book Reviews: Contemporary African American Cinema, Film Architecture, Ang Lee, The Simpsons

Around the Circuit: Berlin International Film Festival



Issue 49
January/February/March 2011
Carl Freedman on Gangsterism and Capitalism

Part 1: The Supplement of Coppola: Primitive Accumulation and the Godfather Trilogy
by Carl Freedman

Part 2: Hobbes After Marx, Scorsese After Coppola: on GoodFellas
by Carl Freedman

DVD Reviews: L'Argent, Man with a Movie Camera, White Mane, The Red Balloon, Silent Light, Princess

Book Reviews: Vincente Minnelli, Orson Welles, Casablanca, Roman Polanski, The Cinema of the Balkans

Around the Circuit: The New York Film Festival


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